Market Summary

INDICES

Resource Commodities

Name

Last

Change

Gold

1306.40

0.67%

Silver

15.43

0.32%

Copper

2.92

0.000

Platinum

863.50

0.80%

Oil

59.83

1.34%

Natural Gas

2.82

1.91%

Uranium

26.25

0.94%

Zinc

1.29

0.00%

VANCOUVER (Reuters) - Institutional investors hoping to profit from cobalt, this year’s high-flying metal, are buying into companies that are smaller than their usual fare to gain exposure to an industry supplying the burgeoning electric car market.

Prices for cobalt CBD0, a key ingredient in lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles, have spiked 83 percent this year on forecasts that demand will double in the next decade as consumers switch to less-polluting cars.

Nearly all cobalt, which prolongs battery life, is mined as a by-product of copper and nickel, making it difficult for investors to get direct exposure.

Much like the recent boom in lithium, another battery ingredient, cobalt’s surge has resulted from heady forecasts for ownership of electric vehicles. UBS in May said it expected them to account for 3.1 percent of global car sales in 2021 and 13.7 percent in 2025, up from 1 percent this year.

In response, small cobalt-focused companies are mushrooming, mostly in Canada, a long-time hub for mining start-ups, but only one, Cobalt 27 Capital Corp KBLT.V, concentrates entirely on the mineral.

“To gain exposure to the cobalt theme in any pure way, you almost have to go down the market capitalization spectrum,” said portfolio manager Ben Cleary of Sydney-based Tribeca Investment Partners.

Institutions are often wary of small-cap stocks, which can be volatile and difficult to sell because of their small number of investors.

Tribeca, which manages A$2.5 billion ($2 billion), owns shares of Canada’s Ecobalt Solutions Inc ECS.TO, which is building a cobalt mine in Idaho. It also has stock in small Australian miner Cobalt One CO1.AX, which is being acquired by Canada’s First Cobalt FCC.V in a three-way tie up to expand its exploration land in the province of Ontario.

COBALT LISTINGS SURGE

At the end of July, 110 companies mining or exploring for cobalt were on the Toronto Stock Exchange and TSX Venture Exchange, a market for smaller-capitalization stocks, compared with fewer than 30 in 2015, according to SNL Financial.

Some of the optimism is already built into cobalt stocks. Cobalt One has surged 30 percent this year, First Cobalt has nearly doubled, and Ecobalt has jumped 144 percent.

Some junior miners point out that their projects are in more politically stable regions than the Democratic Republic of Congo, where more than half the world’s cobalt is produced. Last year Amnesty International said some mines there were using child labor.

“(Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Officer) Elon Musk and others are saying: ’Where do I get my cobalt if I don’t want to go to the Congo?’” said First Cobalt CEO Trent Mell.